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Re: Do you think the CD will eventually go the way of vinyl? [message #83149 is a reply to message #83146] |
Mon, 16 April 2007 06:32 |
Neil
Messages: 1645 Registered: April 2006
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Senior Member |
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In short, yes and no. Do i think album is all but dead? Yes.
Do i think CD's will go away as a medium completely? Nah, not
for awhile anyway; some people still like to hold a product in
their hands.
What bothers me the most about this trend, however, is the fact
that music has become just another low-end commodity, worth
anywhere from nothing, to a buck; depending on the perception
of who it is you're asking.
Neil
"Mike R." <emarenot@yahoo.com> wrote:
>Its a hard question to avoid. I think that CD's, like vinyl, will
>eventually occupy a niche, but music develvered by the web seems the future.
>If you think of web pages as "cover art," at least we'll be able to
>"package" the music with all kinds of visuals. I remember when folks used
>to be very concerned about record covers shrinking down to jewel-case size.
>MR
>"Louis Guarino Jr." <kateeba@snet.net> wrote in message
>news:4622b1f1$1@linux...
>>
>> I just read this and it made me think about the industry and who buys
>what,
>> and what the future might hold.
>>
>> So what do you people think???
>>
>>
> http://www.macnewsworld.com/story/rUnJmz9vjqgbZu/In-a-World- of-iPods-Will-the-CD-Go-the-Way-of-Vinyl.xhtml
>>
>> Lou
>
>
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Re: Do you think the CD will eventually go the way of vinyl? [message #83194 is a reply to message #83149] |
Mon, 16 April 2007 16:43 |
Paul Braun
Messages: 391 Registered: September 2005
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Senior Member |
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On 16 Apr 2007 23:32:22 +1000, "Neil" <IOIU@OIU.com> wrote:
>
>In short, yes and no. Do i think album is all but dead? Yes.
>Do i think CD's will go away as a medium completely? Nah, not
>for awhile anyway; some people still like to hold a product in
>their hands.
>
>What bothers me the most about this trend, however, is the fact
>that music has become just another low-end commodity, worth
>anywhere from nothing, to a buck; depending on the perception
>of who it is you're asking.
>
What also bothers me about the online music thing, as well as the
online video thing, is that we are developing an entire generation of
consumers who accept 128k mp3's as hi-fidelity. Same thing with
online video and most dvd's. Unreasonable mpeg compression, chunky
artifacts, sections of background that drag along and just jump....
And yet all I hear at the local Best Buy is people raving about the
image on the new hi-def tv's when compression artifacts are plainly
visible.
They're just all being trained to accept crappy,
super-high-compression content as "pure digital quality."
Gives a really bad name to digital.
pab, curmudgeon-in-training.
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